Local NewsDecember 20, 2020

Visits provide a salve of normalcy to children at the end of a tumultuous year of masks and online school

JOCELYN GECKER of the Associated Press
Santa, portrayed by Dan Kemmis, talks Dec. 8 to a family wearing masks as he sits inside a protective bubble in Seattle’s Greenwood neighborhood. Kemmis has been Santa in past years, but he started his daily appearances early this year and added his “snow globe” tent because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
Santa, portrayed by Dan Kemmis, talks Dec. 8 to a family wearing masks as he sits inside a protective bubble in Seattle’s Greenwood neighborhood. Kemmis has been Santa in past years, but he started his daily appearances early this year and added his “snow globe” tent because of the COVID-19 pandemic.Ted S. Warren/Associated Press
A young girl and boy visit with the Santa in a snow globe during Automobile Alley’s Lights on Broadway Dec. 5 in Oklahoma City, Okla.
A young girl and boy visit with the Santa in a snow globe during Automobile Alley’s Lights on Broadway Dec. 5 in Oklahoma City, Okla.Doug Hoke/the Oklahoman via Associated Press
LEFT: Father Frost looks out through a decorated 10-foot snow globe Dec. 10 while parents and children pause for photos at Trolley Square in Salt Lake City.
LEFT: Father Frost looks out through a decorated 10-foot snow globe Dec. 10 while parents and children pause for photos at Trolley Square in Salt Lake City.Rick Bowmer/Associated Press
LEFT: Charlie Bush, dressed as Santa Claus, wears a face shield as a precaution against coronavirus as he greets people waiting in their cars at Glittering Lights, a drive-thru holiday lights display Dec. 10 in Las Vegas.RIGHT: Santa Claus adjusts his protective face shield between visits from children and their families Nov. 20 at Bass Pro Shops in Miami.
LEFT: Charlie Bush, dressed as Santa Claus, wears a face shield as a precaution against coronavirus as he greets people waiting in their cars at Glittering Lights, a drive-thru holiday lights display Dec. 10 in Las Vegas.RIGHT: Santa Claus adjusts his protective face shield between visits from children and their families Nov. 20 at Bass Pro Shops in Miami.John Locher/Associated Press
ABOVE: Larry Jefferson (onscreen right) portrays Santa Claus and conducts an online visit Dec. 9 with Raquel Anaya (bottom left) and her cousins, Lexi Reyes (top left) and Luna Reyes from his home in Duncanville, Texas. The children lost a grandmother to COVID-19 recently.LEFT: A young girl and boy visit with the Santa in a snow globe during Automobile Alley’s Lights on Broadway Dec. 5 in Oklahoma City, Okla.
ABOVE: Larry Jefferson (onscreen right) portrays Santa Claus and conducts an online visit Dec. 9 with Raquel Anaya (bottom left) and her cousins, Lexi Reyes (top left) and Luna Reyes from his home in Duncanville, Texas. The children lost a grandmother to COVID-19 recently.LEFT: A young girl and boy visit with the Santa in a snow globe during Automobile Alley’s Lights on Broadway Dec. 5 in Oklahoma City, Okla.L.M. Otero/Associated Press
Santa Claus adjusts his protective face shield between visits from children and their families Nov. 20 at Bass Pro Shops in Miami.
Santa Claus adjusts his protective face shield between visits from children and their families Nov. 20 at Bass Pro Shops in Miami.Lynne Sladky/Associated Press
BELOW: The Bell family poses for a photo Dec. 10 in front of Santa, while keep at a safe distance, as they visit Santa’s Garage on the roof of a parking deck near Soldier Field in Chicago.
BELOW: The Bell family poses for a photo Dec. 10 in front of Santa, while keep at a safe distance, as they visit Santa’s Garage on the roof of a parking deck near Soldier Field in Chicago.Charles Rex Arbogast/Associated Press

Seeing Santa is for many families a holiday tradition that goes back generations. It’s the annual snapshot that year-after-year marks the passage of time, and a reminder that children believe in magic, and that a jolly bearded man can make their wishes come true.

But it’s Christmas in 2020, and everything is different. Santa sits behind plexiglass, or in a life-sized snow globe. And then, of course, there’s Zoom Santa.

Associated Press photographers set out to capture the socially distanced, decidedly 2020 Santa visits taking place across the United States.

Much of the tradition is altered this year. Sitting on Santa’s lap is out. There is no whispering of wish lists into his ear. Getting in to see Santa this year often requires making an appointment and temperature checks upon arrival. Many stores, from Macy’s and Nieman Marcus to smaller venues around the country, have opted for virtual visits.

Conversations with Santa this year, inevitably, include the virus.

Kids ask if Santa will wear a mask when he visits their homes on Christmas Eve. He asks in turn if they’ve been naughty or nice — and good about washing their hands with water and soap.

Some children have lost parents, grandparents or other loved ones. They miss their schools and friends.

Yet the Christmas spirit endures.

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“It’s different this year, but it’s still magical,” said Larry Jefferson, who has converted a room in his suburban Dallas home to Santa’s workshop where he conducts virtual visits. “The children see me on the screen, they’re like, ‘Oh my gosh, Santa Claus is talking to me from the North Pole.”

Perhaps, seeing Santa is the salve families needed at the end of this tumultuous year. Despite all that has changed, Santa still looks pretty much the same and restores a feeling of comfort in an otherwise turbulent time.

“I didn’t think there was going to be Santa this year. We were super excited to find out we could see him,” said Tarah Peargin, a California mother of 8-year-old twins William and Payton.

Like every year, the twins dressed up in the outfits they will wear on Christmas. For William, a red dress shirt, a waistcoat and tie with pin-striped dress pants; Payton wore a velvety red dress. They went to visit Santa’s Wonderland inside a Bass Pro Shop in Rancho Cucamonga, Calif., near Los Angeles.

William covered up with a plastic visor, and Payton a purple face mask. The idea that Santa, too, needed protective equipment didn’t seem so unusual.

“They took it in stride,” said their mom.

It was a fitting final photo for the family’s annual album.

“It kind of sums up 2020.”

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